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Thread: 4 axis rotary

  1. #1
    i dont think i got this in the right section ... please move if not

    here goes ...

    what im trying to understand on a rotary axis is how is the g code defined

    for example , ive read (or watched you tube vids) that when using for example aspire vectric , that the x axis ( for example , could also be Y ) is unplugged and the rotary axis is plugged into this axis , so really the machine becomes a y and z linear machine and x rotary (so still a 3 axis machine not 4 ? )


    but now if you had to use solidcam, camworks, etc then you could have a true 4 axis machine , so you could rough a piece of material lets say at 0 degrees, then rotate it 180 degrees and rough it again. Then do a finishing pass using the rotary axis ?


    is that the way it works ?

  2. #2
    A proper cam program, depending on the post processor of course, will define the 4th axis as "A". So you have X, Y, Z, & A, and of course B, C if you have 6 axes.

    Now the movement in "A" may be in mm or in degrees depending on your machine settings. There is a tick box in mach3 for that.
    https://emvioeng.com
    Machine tools and 3D printing supplies. Expanding constantly.

  3. #3
    If you're hand coding you need to start out understanding how the G-Code works, if you have a decent CAD/CAM package you just need to get the config right and the code comes out right.
    There are so many ways to skin this cat, you can rough and finish a 4-Axis job in 3 Axes with manual 90 degree indexing, without using a 4th.

    - Nick

  4. #4
    As the guys said, you'll have an x,y,z and a axis. Best bet is to do all the roughing in 3 axis mode and just index 90 degrees each time, then do your finishing in 4 axis mode to optimise the surface finish. Solidcam has some nice features where you can finish parallel to a curve or to an axis or you can let your toolpath morph from the shape that defines one side of a face to that or the other. So if one end of the face was an arc and the other a straight line, your toolpath woud start as an arc and gradually change as it machines the face to straight lines. Nifty stuff.
    Noel.

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